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A35
world
Wednesday, April 2, 2014 www.guardian.co.tt Guardian
PUBLIC NOTICE
ANYONE WITH INFORMATION REGARDING THE
WHEREABOUTS OF
ANTHONY BOUCHER
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS: TANCABEAN TERRACE
PIPIOL ROAD
UPPER SANTA CRUZ
SHOULD CONTACT THE CO-ORDINATOR OF
THE FAMILY COURT SOCIAL SERVICES
TELEPHONE NUMBERS
223-1060 OR VISIT THE SOCIAL
SERVICES UNIT AT:
CIPRIANI PLACE
#4 CIPRIANI BOULEVARD
PORT OF SPAIN
0401026
o not miss "The Frog Prince" at Queens Hall from April 17 to 21
(Easter Weekend) a new play from the creative mind of the Crazy Catholic
Napa box office opens daily from 24 March
at 11am daily 624-1104, 625-4224
INFO: 732-5796, 683-6496, 796-4272
TICKET OUTLETS:
Sat 5th April - 7.30 p.m.
Sun 6th April - 5.30 p.m.
Fri 4th April - 8.00 p.m.
OPENING DAY: 2 persons on 1 ticket ($150)
RESERVED SEATS
$125.
KIDS & ADULTS
$100.
TICKETS
Directed by
Crazy
Catholic
Trinidad and Tobago get ready to laugh, fall in love and be properly entertained as the
classic fairy tale returns to Napa Port of Spain for 3 big shows!! From the producers of
LIVE AT THE NATIONAL ACADEMY
OF THE PERFORMING ARTS (NAPA),
PORT OF SPAIN
Cinderella
The show everyone loves; couples, families,
friends and theatre lovers everywhere.
You are invited to the ball - Magic,
Romance, Comedy and Non-Stop Fun
Produced by D C Shell Theatre - Pioneers in family
ntertainment; fairy tales, Bollywood theatre,
adventure & clean comedy.
CCCatholic
Crazy
Don't dream... come!
Hundreds of residents of an
area contaminated by a cata-
strophic reactor meltdown at a
nuclear plant in northeastern
Japan have been allowed to
return home three years after
the disaster.
An evacuation order, declared
in the aftermath of a devastating
tsunami that crippled the
Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant
in March, 2011, was lifted at mid-
night on Monday from the
Miyakoji district of Tamura city
in Fukushima Prefecture.
Residents of the town, who
have been in limbo ever since,
are now free to re-inhabit their
homes following decontamination
work in the area.
The Tohoku earthquake and
subsequent tsunami off Japan s
northeastern coast led to the
worst nuclear disaster since Cher-
nobyl in 1986. Three reactors
melted down, with the resulting
radiation fallout forcing nearly
140,000 people from their homes.
Around 138,000 Fukushima
residents remain in temporary
accommodation, with a number
of cities, towns and villages
reduced to ghost towns due to
continued high levels of radia-
tion.
"We are doing as much as
possible (to allow) the other res-
idents can come home. We are
strengthening support towards
the residents (and) strengthening
the decommissioning work," a
TEPCO spokesperson told CNN.
However, concerns remain
about background radiation lev-
els and uncertainty surrounding
the safety of the area, especially
given past concerns about the
reporting of radiation levels in
the area by Fukushima s oper-
ator, Tokyo Electric Power Com-
pany (TEPCO).
Last month, Miyakoji residents
were told at a community meet-
ing that radiation contamination
levels had lowered sufficiently to
enable their return to the area---
though some voiced concern over
existing radiation levels despite
decontamination efforts around
some communities.
"Yes, I am a bit worried. But
it s my land, my house, so I am
feel safer and more at home here,"
one resident told broadcaster
NHK.
Areas are declared suitable for
habitation if residents are exposed
to a maximum of 20 millisieverts
of radiation per year. (CNN)
GENEVA---The UN s refugee agency
said yesterday it was prepared to help
evacuate some 19,000 Muslims at risk
of attack from mainly Christian mili-
tias in the conflict-torn Central
African Republic.
"What we don t want is to stand by
and watch people being slaughtered,"
UNHCR spokeswoman Fatoumata Leje-
une-Kaba told reporters in Geneva.
She pointed out that so-called anti-
balaka militias controlled major routes
to and from Bangui as well as a number
of towns and villages in the southwest-
ern part of the country.
They posed a particular threat to
Muslims in the PK12 neighbourhood
of the capital, in Boda, Carnot and
Berberati to the west and Bossangoa
further north, she said, lamenting that
"we fear for the lives of 19,000 Muslims
in those locations".
"UNHCR stands ready to assist with
their evacuation to safer areas within
or outside of the country," she said,
pointing out that so far "the only thing
keeping them from being killed right
now is the presence of (international)
troops".
UN staff were heading to the town
of Bemal in the north yesterday to
discuss possibly relocating Muslims
there, but Lejeune-Kaba said it was
difficult, since locals feared welcoming
evacuees could attract unrest to their
area.
The chronically unstable Central
African Republic sank into chaos after
the mainly Muslim Seleka rebels who
had helped topple president Francois
Bozize a year ago refused to lay down
their arms and went rogue.
Their campaign of killing, raping and
looting prompted members of the
Christian majority to form the anti-
balaka vigilante groups, which are also
accused of atrocities.
Around 8,000 international troops
are working to contain the crisis in the
former French colony, where more than
2,000 people have been killed since
December.
At the height of the crisis in Decem-
ber and January, more than a quarter
of the country s 4.6 million people had
fled their homes.
A new surge in bloodshed has forced
nearly 16,000 people from their homes
in the capital since early last week alone,
Lejeune-Kaba said.
According to UNHCR numbers,
637,000 people in total are now dis-
placed inside the country, including
207,000 in Bangui, while 82,000 mostly
Muslim Central Africans had streamed
into neighbouring countries in the past
three months.
The increase in violence has claimed
more than 60 lives in the capital since
March 22, Cecile Pouilly, spokeswoman
for the UN s human rights office, told
reporters yesterday. (AFP)
UN ready to
help evacuate
19,000 Muslims
in Central Africa
Fukushima residents
cleared to return home